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All it costs the church are a few extra dollars in communion wafers and wine.
His wide mouth was open just enough to accept a thin communion wafer.
At one time they also baked communion wafers for use in Masses.
Brazil's words were sticky, as if he had communion wafers in his mouth.
The communion wafer glued itself to the roof of her mouth.
That's one reason I stopped giving out communion wafers.
According to legend, a boy went into the forest after church and spit out his communion wafer.
One protestor broke a communion wafer and threw it to the floor.
After the men who wanted one received their Communion wafer, he wished them "Good luck."
He tells us we have to be careful to stick out our tongues far enough so that the Communion wafer won't fall to the floor.
They put the Communion wafer on your tongue.
If word spread that the Communion wafers were somehow to blame, it could have repercussions around the world.
In another, a group of bridesmaids gobble communion wafers and Champagne.
Which is an almost nonexistent taste" - like that of mother's milk, or the communion wafer.
Alice's head tilted backward slightly, as though she were offering her tongue to take the Communion wafer.
Henry opens his mouth to a crack that might accommodate a communion wafer, then closes it again.
Prescription drugs instead of Communion wafers, for instance.
"They didn't crack a single Communion wafer, just blessed them as they were.
"There's a new low-fat communion wafer on the market.
The effort to obtain a wheat-free communion wafer for Haley has come up several times in her parents' divorce.
Perhaps the tainting of the Communion wafers was only a way to test the breadth and range of that power.
Anybody gotten high off communion wafers lately?
Father Hagan stood before the altar, the chalice and Communion wafer in his hand.
The frosting on the Communion wafer was that the conference was bound to attract global media coverage.
The stolen chips prove to be communion wafers, as evidenced by the cross imprinted on each one.
How these sacramental wafers came to be in that place and in a native-made pyx, how many centuries they may have been secreted there, and how it is that they did not long ago dry and crumble and perish, no one can guess.
By the age of ten or eleven, she began craving the sacramental bread.
Peasant woman stole a sacramental bread in church in Šumperk.
In the varying Protestant denominations, there is a wide variety of practices concerning the sacramental bread used.
Common bread was used rather than unleavened sacramental bread.
A precedent for the modern cracker can be found in nautical ship biscuits, military hardtack, and sacramental bread.
Thus, the sacramental bread symbolizes the Resurrected Christ.
Bede says that Mellitus was exiled because he refused the brothers' request for a taste of the sacramental bread.
But The Lord's Supper is now commonly used in reference to a celebration involving no food other than the sacramental bread and wine.
He is repulsed by garlic, crucifixes and sacramental bread, and he can only cross running water at low or high tide.
They banished Mellitus, Bishop of London, from the kingdom after he refused them the sacramental bread.
Blood rays spring up from Christ's wounds, ending in the Holy Chalice and turning themselves into the sacramental bread.
Bread is also significant in Christianity as one of the elements (alongside wine) of the Eucharist; see sacramental bread.
In return, the curate's responsibilities included paying for a clerk and the sacramental bread and wine used at Communion, and funding maintenance of the building.
The nuns also produced the sacramental bread for local parishes, and even the Atlantic Fleet during the Second World War.
The hem of a sleeve or the heel of a boot may also conceal a crumb of sacramental bread, which protects the bearer from the police.
The chronicler Friar Agostinho de Monte Alverne wrote of the incident, noting that all was destroyed except the main body and the sacramental bread.
In 1420, the status of the Jewish community hit a low point when a Jew from Upper Austria was charged with the desecration of the sacramental bread.
The donkey which transported the sacramental bread from the Exilles' church fell on the ground and the Holy Spirit rose and illuminated the square from the air.
Hostia is the origin of the word "host" for the Eucharistic sacrament of the Western Church; see Sacramental bread: Catholic Church.
Later, after eating all the sacramental bread he broke open the reliquary took out the bag containing the relics he put them all the stolen items in an empty chest.
Other Protestants at Saint-Orens mocking the doctrine of Transubstantiation took hold of Sacramental bread prepared for the Catholic Eucharist and defiled it.
The term "consubstantiation" has been associated with such a "local" inclusion of the Body and Blood of Christ in the sacramental bread and wine as has the term "impanation."
Tradition states that one of the Gnostic sects known as the Ophites caused a tame serpent to coil around the sacramental bread, and worshipped it as the representative of the Savior.
As numbers of clergy increased, the small apse which contained the altar, or table upon which the sacramental bread and wine were offered in the rite of Holy Communion, was not sufficient to accommodate them.